The President's Daily Brief - September 19th, 2025: Trump Declares War On Antifa & A Rift In Netanyahu’s Government
Episode Date: September 19, 2025In this episode of The President's Daily Brief: President Trump says he’s labeling Antifa a “major terrorist organization,” calling the group a dangerous radical threat. We’ll take a look ...at the group and potential legal issues with the President’s declaration. Israel’s push into Gaza City isn’t just dividing the public, it’s exposing major rifts between Prime Minister Netanyahu and his own security chiefs. Israel quietly offers Syria a sweeping new security deal, and Damascus now says a border agreement could be sealed within days. And in today’s Back of the Brief—Venezuela launches major military drills after a string of deadly U.S. strikes on alleged drug boats in the Caribbean. To listen to the show ad-free, become a premium member of The President’s Daily Brief by visiting PDBPremium.com. Please remember to subscribe if you enjoyed this episode of The President's Daily Brief. YouTube: youtube.com/@presidentsdailybrief Jacked Up Fitness: Get the all-new Shake Weight by Jacked Up Fitness at https://JackedUpShakeWeight.comStash Financial: Don't Let your money sit around. Go to https://get.stash.com/PDB to see how you can receive $25 towards your first stock purchase. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's Friday, the 19th of September.
Welcome to the President's Daily Brief.
I'm Mike Baker. Your eyes and ears on the world stage.
And, yes, quite clearly, still on the road.
All right, let's get ourselves briefed.
First up, President Trump says he's labeling Antifa a, quote,
major terrorist organization, calling the group a dangerous radical threat.
We'll take a look at the group and the potential legal issues with the President's declaration.
Later in the show, Israel's push into Gaza's
city isn't just dividing the public, it's exposing major riffs between Prime Minister Nanyahu and his
own security chiefs. Plus, Israel quietly offers Syria a sweeping new security deal, and Damascus
now says a border agreement could be sealed within days. And in today's back of the brief,
Venezuela launches major military exercises after a string of U.S. military strikes on alleged drugboats
in the Caribbean. But first, today's PDB spot.
light. We start today with more fallout from the murder of Charlie Kirk. The killing has sparked
renewed attention on extremist groups and radicalization inside the U.S. And this week, President Trump
made headlines by announcing his intention to designate the left-wing network known as Antifa
as a terrorist organization. In a post-to-truth social, Trump declared, quote,
I am pleased to inform our many patriots that I am designating Antifa a sick, dangerous,
left disaster as a major terrorist organization. I will also be strongly recommending that those
funding Antifa be thoroughly investigated in accordance with the highest legal standards and practices,
end quote. Trump also called Antifa members, quote, professional agitators. He accused them of
throwing bricks at ice and border patrol vehicles and argued their actions amount to subversive crimes
rather than legitimate protest. So, who are Antifa? Well,
To understand the group, in a sense, let's get some context.
You have to go back to Germany in the early 1930s.
As Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party were rising,
communist activists launched a militant street movement,
which became nicknamed Antifa.
It wasn't one organized party with membership cards and dues.
It was more of a loose coalition of far-left factions,
primarily communists who believe violent confrontation
was the only way to stop fascism in its tracks.
Once Hitler seized power, the Nazis crushed the movement, jailing or killing its members,
but the imagery, black and red flags, masked activists and the tactics, street violence, vandalism,
intimidation, were revived decades later by radicals in Europe and eventually carried across the Atlantic.
In the U.S., Antifa has never been a centralized organization.
Instead, it's a banner under which loosely affiliated agitators rally, showing up at protests,
often hijacking them and directing them into chaos.
Over the years, Antifa-linked individuals have engaged in arson, vandalism, violent assaults,
and in some cases murder.
That track record has led many to describe them not as activists, but as a domestic network
of violent extremists operating in plain sight.
But here's the challenge.
While Trump's declaration sends a political signal, for sure, backing it up with legally
approved actions, well, that may prove difficult.
The U.S. government has a well-established process for designating foreign terrorist organizations,
groups like al-Qaeda, ISIS, or Hezbollah. That authority rests with the U.S. State Department.
But there's no equivalent process for labeling a domestic group as a terrorist organization.
And since Antifa is not only based in the U.S., but also lacks formal leadership, membership
roles, or a centralized command structure, it's nearly impossible to pin down in the way that authorities do with foreign groups.
So while Trump can announce that Antifa is being treated like a terrorist group, the legal levers
to enforce that designation aren't really there. Now, that doesn't mean that the administration
is powerless. Federal prosecutors already have a range of tools that they can use. When
Antifa activists commit assaults or vandalism or intimidation, prosecutors can bring charges under
existing criminal statutes. Local authorities can use riot, assault, and arson laws. And federal
investigators can pursue individuals who provide material support. That would be money or logistics
or supplies for criminal actions tied to Antifa protests. In other words, you don't need a blanket
terrorist label to hit these activists with serious charges. You just need the will. Another option
that's likely to come into play here is the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. Now,
that's better known as RICO, which was originally used, of course, to take on the mob. RICO lets prosecutors go
after not just the foot soldiers committing crimes, but the broader network that enables and coordinates them.
If authorities can prove Antifa activists are part of an ongoing criminal enterprise, say,
planning assaults online, or pooling funds for weapons, or running coordinated intimidation campaigns,
then RICO becomes a powerful tool. Convictions under RICO can bring long prison sentences and stiff
financial penalties. The challenge again, though, is Antifa's structure, or frankly lack thereof.
Unlike the mafia, which has bosses and captains and soldiers,
Antifa is designed to be decentralized.
There's no clear hierarchy, no national council, and no official membership.
That makes it difficult to prove the kind of organized enterprise that RICO was built to target.
Still, if investigators can map out patterns of coordination, linking activists across multiple cities,
tying their actions to the same funding streams or tracing communications networks,
then prosecutors could argue Antifa functions as a de facto.
Enterprise. And that would open the door to sweeping indictments against not just individuals
smashing windows, but the organizers and financial backers behind them. For Trump, the announcement
accomplishes two things. Politically, it signals toughness. He's taking on a group that conservatives
have long viewed as a domestic menace. Legally, it lays the groundwork for prosecutors and law
enforcement to lean harder on Antifa-affiliated activists, donors, and organizers. But the president's
Declaration is more of a rallying cry than a legal decree.
Unless Congress creates a mechanism to designate domestic groups as terrorist organizations,
the U.S. government will have to rely on existing criminal laws, state statutes, and tools like RICO to crack down on Antifa's activities.
In the meantime, the group will likely continue to operate the way it always has, loosely organized, masked, and creating chaos on the streets.
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All right, coming up next, Israel's Gaza offensive sparks riffs between Netanyahu and his generals.
While Syria signals a border deal with Israel could be just days away.
I'll be right back.
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Welcome back to the PDB.
Israel's advance on Gaza City is creating major divisions
between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his top security chiefs,
fractures that are now also mirrored in the Israeli public.
As we've covered here on the PDB,
it all comes down to three recent policy moves by Netanyahu,
ordering the storming of Gaza City,
green lighting last week's strike on senior Hamas officials in Qatar and hardening ceasefire terms on Hamas.
Each has pitted him against the very military and intelligence leaders that he relies on,
who warned that Netanyahu is dragging Israel further into a war that it cannot sustain,
ignoring both mounting domestic doubts and international fallout.
Take IDF Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Isle Zamir.
Netanyahu once hailed his, quote, aggressive approach.
But yet Zemir has long resists.
the Gaza's city order since its inception, citing exhausted soldier reserves after nearly two years
of fighting and the risk that Jerusalem could wind up governing some two million Palestinians.
Israeli security officials also warned that the offensive endangers the estimated 20 Israeli
hostages still alive that are trapped in the city in Hamas custody. Still, the operation went ahead.
And Gaza was not the only flashpoint. Zamir, joined by Mulsad chief David Barnia,
opposed the timing of Israel's strike on Hamas leaders in Doha.
Their case was that it undermined Qatar's role as ceasefire mediator and rattled Washington.
Three sources familiar with the deliberations who spoke anonymously said the strike went ahead
over Barnea and Zemir's objections.
The ceasefire talks exposed perhaps the sharpest break.
Netanyahu ditched the long-debated phased deal that Hamas had claimed they would accept
in favor of a maximalist all-or-nothing approach for the release of.
of the hostages. Military chiefs, intelligence leaders, and even his own national security advisor
argued for the phased approach, but were brushed aside. Hamas, as expected, rejected the prime
minister's gambit. Israel's system affords little room for defiance. Generals obey or they resign.
Zemir has chosen to stay, vowing the Gaza city offensive will deliver a, quote, decisive defeat
to Hamas. While still stressing, the hostages return remains, quote, a national and moral obligation.
The public mood, however, is shifting.
Recent polls show most Israelis now favor a negotiated hostage deal over Netanyahu's demands,
and many doubt the government's claim that Hamas could be entirely eradicated
after nearly two years of war that, of course, has failed to do so.
Many Israelis now accuse Netanyahu of prolonging the war to placate far-right coalition partners
and to dodge accountability for the security failures of the Hamas 7 October terror attacks.
And where past defense ministers wielded real political cloud as a counterweight to the prime minister,
the current defense minister, Israel Katz, is widely viewed as a Netanyahu loyalist,
promising to, quote, unleash hell on Hamas until it surrenders or is eliminated.
Some political analysts inside the Jewish state warned that this unchecked balance
leaves national security decisions concentrated almost entirely in Netanyahu's hands,
shattering decades of consensus between political and military leadership.
One Israeli democracy expert put it as, quote,
The chief of staff has been forced to take his soldiers into a battle that he doesn't necessarily believe in, end quote.
And beyond Israel's borders, Netanyahu's policy moves has frayed ties with Arab states
and drawn condemnation and sanctions from traditional allies.
The end result is a war strategy shaped less by consensus than by one man's judgment,
leaving the IDF to execute policies its generals have openly questioned.
Okay, staying in the region, Israel has put a new security blueprint for Syria on the table,
one that would carve out demilitarized zones from Damascus to the Israeli border,
as the negotiations reportedly inch toward a possible deal.
On paper, it marks the most serious bid in decades to reset relations between two sworn enemies.
At the same time, Israeli warplanes are still occasionally hitting Syrian targets,
including strikes this month on a Syrian Air Force base and military base.
barracks. Washington, for its part, has taken a warmer line with new Syrian President
Ahmed al-Shara. Shara, of course, is the one-time Al-Qaeda operative, whose Islamic
coalition of fighters toppled and replaced former President Assad last year. Since then, the Trump
administration has been quietly greasing the wheels of back-channel diplomacy.
Speaking Wednesday in Damascus, Al-Shera said peace with Israel, quote, could be within days,
casting himself as the voice of a war-weary Syria after 13 years of bloodshed.
He added, quote, we could reach an agreement at any moment, but warned the real test would be
whether Jerusalem holds up its end.
The latest security accord session in London brought together Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister
Ron Dermar, Syria's foreign minister, and U.S. envoy to Syria, Tom Barrack.
It was the third such meeting, and while insiders say that progress has been made, no one
appears to be betting on a sudden breakthrough.
Still, the very idea of a deal carries weight.
it would replace the 1974 disengagement agreement, which created a UN-patrolled buffer zone that kept the two countries' shared border mostly quiet for decades.
Israel has since entered occupied parts of that buffer, citing potential threats from Damascus's new Islamist regime, and says the deal collapsed with Assad's ouster.
Al-Sharah insists that Syria kept its side of the bargain, accusing Jerusalem of being the one to break with the faith.
The framework on the table borrows heavily from Israel's 1979 peace treaty with Egypt, which
divided Sinai into three security zones with varying levels of demilitarization.
This draft, from what we know, as details remain limited, applies the same model to Syria,
with the area closest to the Israeli frontier occupied only by Syrian police and internal security,
no army units or heavy weapons.
The second zone would permit limited Syrian troop deployments with light arms.
And the third, furthest from the Israeli border, would allow a capped but larger Syrian military presence.
The buffer itself would be stretched two kilometers into Syrian soil.
Critically, it's worth noting that the whole stretch becomes a no-fly zone for Syrian aircraft,
while Israel keeps its own skies untouched.
In exchange, Israel would gradually pull back from the Syrian territory annexed in recent months.
But don't expect for everything to be on the table.
Mount Hermon and the Golan Heights are not up for disdain.
discussion during these negotiations reportedly. Israeli officials say those holdings are non-negotiable
for the Jewish state. And the bigger picture? Well, a senior Israeli official emphasized that Jerusalem
intends to preserve an aerial corridor through Syria to Iran, keeping the door open for future
strikes on Tehran's Islamic regime. That reminder pulls a focus back to the larger regional chess
board, from Iran's stalled nuclear talks with Washington to the unknown state of the regime's enriched uranium
stockpiles following June's 12-day war.
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu is even weighing a possible face-to-face with Al-Shera from Syria
on the sidelines of the upcoming UN General Assembly later this month, though inside
sources do say that those odds are slim.
For Syria, battered militarily and economically, leverage in the talks is scarce.
Israeli demands are sweeping, and the asymmetry is obvious.
Still Al-Shera's overture, signals to Damascus, ready, it seems, to lock in.
at least a measure of stability, even if largely on Israel's terms.
Coming up next to today's back of the brief, Venezuela stages three days of drills
following U.S. attacks that sank suspected narcotics traffickers at sea.
More on that when we come back.
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where taste recognizes taste. In today's back of the brief, the U.S. military has struck again
in the Caribbean, taking down a third suspected drugboat in what the Trump administration calls its most
muscular counter-narcotics push in decades. President Trump confirmed the strike on the White
House lawn, telling reporters, quote, we knocked off actually three boats, not two, but you saw two.
As we covered on Tuesday's afternoon bulletin, the president was referring to the Pentagon released
footage showing three alleged traffickers killed in a U.S. strike earlier this week.
That came on the heels of the September 2nd strike that left 11 suspected narco traffickers dead.
Trump did not specify the death toll in this latest third action.
Trump also singled out the South American country's most notorious gang, the Trump.
Trendor-Laguay or TDA gang, warning Venezuelan strongman Nicholas Maduro directly to, quote,
stop sending members of the TDA to the U.S., stop sending drugs to the U.S.
The president later, on Truth Social, blasted the cartel as, quote, extraordinarily violent
narco-terrorists.
As you might imagine, the military strikes and Trump's rhetoric didn't sit well with Venezuela's
dictator.
Maduro accused Washington of plotting regime change, declaring that recent communications with the U.S.
had, quote, broken down.
involving Venezuela was ready for a, quote, armed struggle.
He threatened to declare a Republican arms
if U.S. warships and jets turn their guns from drugboats
to the regime itself.
And so, Venezuela is now matching its rhetoric
with as much muscle as it muster.
The defense ministry has launched three days of large-scale exercises
dubbed sovereign Caribbean,
featuring a dozen ships, 22 aircraft,
20 small boats, and armed drones.
Maduro's regime officials said the maneuvers would showcase
quote, air defense deployments and electronic warfare actions against the so-called
threatening vulgar voice of the U.S. Meanwhile, as we've been tracking, the Pentagon has
anchored eight warships, some with amphibious assault capability, alongside F-35 fighter jets,
and some 4,500 troops in the theater. The Trump administration also maintains a $50 million
bounty on Maduro's head. I wonder if his security team is aware of that, citing his
connection to lesser-known drug pushers in Venezuela, known as the cartel of the Sons.
For Maduro, framing the American strikes off his country's coast as imperial aggression
offers political oxygen at home, even as his regime witnesses the reality of U.S.
firepower that it can never match.
And that, my friends, is the President's Daily Brief for Friday, the 19th of September.
Now, if you have any questions or comments, please reach out to me at BDB at thefirsttv.com.
And don't forget what your mother told you.
New episodes of our acclaimed and possibly one-day award-winning weekend show, the PDB Situation Report.
They launch every Friday evening at 10 p.m. on the first TV.
And when you look at that, today is Friday.
Hmm.
This weekend's most excellent guests include Eric O'Neill, former FBI counterterrorism and counterintelligence operative,
to discuss the Charlie Kirk murder and the subsequent investigation.
As well as the Heritage Foundation's China expert, Steve Yates, we're looking at efforts to create a U.S.
TikTok, firewalled from the influence of the Chinese Communist Party,
but yet still delivering those cute raccoon and cat and dog videos that we've all come to expect.
You can also catch the Situation Report on our YouTube channel.
You can find that on YouTube, of course, at President's Daily Brief.
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